<SPAN name="chap0111"></SPAN>
<h3> CHAPTER XI </h3>
<h3> THE APPEAL TO AUTHORITY </h3>
<p>"Hic intus homo verus certus optumus recumbo, Publius Octavius Rufus,
decuno."</p>
<p>Mallard stood reading this inscription, graven on an ancient
sarcophagus preserved in the cathedral of Amalfi. A fool, probably,
that excellent Rufus—he said to himself,—but what a happy fool!
Unborn as yet, or to him unknown, the faith that would have bidden him
write himself a miserable sinner; what he deemed himself in life, what
perchance his friends and neighbours deemed him, why not declare it
upon the marble when he rested from all his virtues?</p>
<p>"Here lie I, Ross Mallard; who can say no good of myself, yet have as
little right to say ill; who had no faith whereby to direct my steps,
yet often felt that some such was needful; who spent all my strength on
a task which I knew to be vain; who suffered much and joyed rarely;
whose happiest day was his last."</p>
<p>Somehow like that would it run, if he were to write his own epitaph at
present.</p>
<p>The quiet of the dim sanctuary was helpful to such self-communing. He
relished being alone again, and after an hour's brooding had recovered
at all events a decent balance of thought, a respite from madness in
melancholy.</p>
<p>But he could not employ himself, could not even seek the relief of
bodily exertion; his mind grew sluggish, and threw a lassitude upon his
limbs. The greater part of the day he spent in his room at the hotel,
merely idle. This time he had no energy to attack himself with
adjurations and sarcasms; body and soul were oppressed with uttermost
fatigue, and for a time must lie torpid. Fortunately he was sure of
sleep to-night; the bell of the cathedral might clang its worst, and
still not rob him of the just oblivion.</p>
<p>The next day he strayed into the hills, and there in solitude faced the
enemy in his heart, bidding misery do its worst. In imagination he
followed Reuben Elgar to Naples, saw him speed to Villa Sannazaro,
where as likely as not he would meet Cecily. Mallard had no tangible
evidence of its being Reuben's desire to see Cecily, but he was none
the less convinced that for no other reason had his companion set
forth. And jealousy tormented him sorely. It was his first experience
of this cruellest passion: what hitherto had been only a name to him,
and of ignoble sound, became a disease clutching at his vitals. It
taught him fierceness, injustice, base suspicion, brutal conjecture; it
taught him that of which all these are constituents—hatred.</p>
<p>But it did not constrain him to any unworthy action. The temptation
that passed through his mind when he looked from the balcony on the
carriage that was to convey Elgar, did not return—or only as a bitter
desire, impossible of realization. Distant from Naples he must remain,
awaiting whatsoever might happen.</p>
<p>Ah, bright, gentle, sweet-faced Cecily! Inconceivable to her this
suffering that lay upon her friend. How it would pain her if she knew
of it! With what sad, wondering tenderness her eyes would regard him!
How kindly would she lay her soft hand in his, and entreat him to be
comforted!</p>
<p>If he asked her, would she not give him that hand, to be his always?
Perhaps, perhaps; in her gentleness she would submit to this change,
and do her best to love him. And in return he would give her gruff
affection, removal from the life to which she was accustomed,
loneliness, his uncertain humours, his dubious reputation. How often
most he picture these results, and convince himself of the
impossibility of anything of the kind?</p>
<p>He knew her better than did Mrs. Lessingham; oh, far better! He had
detected in her deep eyes the sleeping passion, some day to awake with
suddenness and make the whole world new to her. He knew how far from
impossible it was that Reuben Elgar should be the prince to break her
charmed slumber. There was the likeness and the unlikeness; common to
both that temperament of enthusiasm. On the one hand, Cecily with her
unsullied maidenhood; and on the other, Elgar with his reckless
experiences—contrasts which so commonly have a mutual attraction.
There was the singularity of their meeting after years, and seeing each
other in such a new light; the interest, the curiosity inevitably
resulting. What likelihood that any distrust would mingle with Cecily's
warmth of feeling, were that feeling once excited? He knew her too well.</p>
<p>How Mrs. Lessingham regarded Elgar he did not know. He had no
confidence in that lady's discretion; he thought it not improbable that
she would speak of Reuben to Cecily in the very way she should not,
making him an impressive figure. Then again, what part was Mrs. Baske
likely to have in such a situation? Could she be relied upon to
represent her brother unfavourably, with the right colour of
unfavourableness? Or was it not rather to be feared that the thought of
Cecily's influence might tempt her to encourage what otherwise she must
have condemned? He retraced in memory that curious dialogue he had held
with Miriam on the drive back from Baiae; could he gather from it any
hints of her probable behaviour?....</p>
<p>By a sudden revulsion of mind, Mallard became aware that in the long
fit of brooding just gone by he had not been occupied with Cecily at
all. Busying his thoughts with Mrs. Baske, he had slipped into a train
of meditation already begun on the evening in question, after the drive
with her. What was Mrs. Baske's true history? How had she come to marry
the man of whom Elgar's phrases had produced such a hateful image? What
was the state, in very deed, of her mind at present? What awaited her
in the future?</p>
<p>It was curious that Mrs. Baske's face was much more recoverable by his
mind's eye than Cecily's. In fact, to see Miriam cost him no effort at
all; equally at will, he heard the sound of her voice. There were times
when Cecily, her look and utterance, visited him very clearly; but this
was when he did not wish to be reminded of her. If he endeavoured to
make her present, as a rule the picturing faculty was irresponsive.</p>
<p>Welcome reverie! If only he could continue to busy himself with idle
speculation concerning the strange young Puritan, and so find relief
from the anguish that beset him. Suppose now, he set himself to imagine
Miriam in unlikely situations. What if she somehow fell into poverty,
was made absolutely dependent on her own efforts? Suppose she suffered
cruelly what so many women have to suffer—toil, oppression, solitude;
what would she become? Not, he suspected, a meek martyr; anything but
that, Miriam Baske. And how magnificent to see her flash out into
revolt against circumstances! Then indeed she would be interesting.</p>
<p>Nay, suppose she fell in love—desperately, with grim fate against her?
For somehow this came more easily to the fancy than the thought of her
loving without obstacle. Presumably she had never loved; her husband was out of
the question. Would she pass her life without that experience? One
thing could be affirmed with certainty; if she lost her heart to a man,
it would not be to a Puritan. He could conceive her being attracted by
a strong and somewhat rude fellow, a despiser of conventionalities,
without religion, a man of brains and blood; one whose look could
overwhelm her with tumultuous scorn, and whose hand, if need be, could
crush her life out at a blow. Why not, however, a highly polished
gentleman, critical, keen of speech, deeply read, brilliant in
conversation, at once man of the world and scholar? Might not that type
have power over her? In a degree, but not so decidedly as the
intellectual brute.</p>
<p>Pshaw! what brain-sickness was this! What was he fallen to! Yet it did
what nothing else would, amused him for a few minutes in his pain. He
recurred to it several times, and always successfully.</p>
<p>Sunday came. This evening would see Elgar back again.</p>
<p>No doubt of his return had yet entered his mind. Whether Reuben would
in reality settle to some kind of work was a different question; but of
course he would come back, if it were only to say that he had kept his
promise, but found he must set off again to some place or other.
Mallard dreaded his coming. News of some kind he would bring, and
Mallard's need was of silence. If he indeed remained here, the old
irritation would revive and go on from day to day. Impossible that they
should live together long.</p>
<p>It was pretty certain by what train he would journey from Naples to
Salerno; easy, therefore, to calculate the probable hour of his arrival
at Amalfi. When that hour drew near, Mallard set out to walk a short
distance along the road, to meet him. Unlike the Sorrento side of the
promontory, the mountains here rise suddenly and boldly out of the sea,
towering to craggy eminences, moulded and cleft into infinite variety
of slope and precipice, bastion and gorge. Cut upon the declivity,
often at vast sheer height above the beach, the road follows the
curving of the hills. Now and then it makes a deep loop inland, on the
sides of an impassable chasm; and set in each of these recesses is a
little town, white-gleaming amid its orchard verdure, with quaint and
many-coloured campanile, with the semblance of a remote time. Far up on
the heights are other gleaming specks, villages which seem utterly
beyond the traffic of man, solitary for ever in sun or mountain mist.</p>
<p>Mallard paid little heed to the things about him; he walked on and on,
watching for a vehicle, listening for the tread of horses. Sometimes he
could see the white road-track miles away, and he strained his eyes in
observing it. Twice or thrice he was deceived; a carriage came towards
him, and with agitation he waited to see its occupants, only to be
disappointed by strange faces.</p>
<p>There are few things more pathetic than persistency in hope due to
ignorance of something that has befallen beyond our ken. It is one of
those instances of the irony inherent in human fate which move at once
to tears and bitter laughter; the waste of emotion, the involuntary
folly, the cruel deception caused by limit of faculties—how they
concentrate into an hour or a day the essence of life itself!</p>
<p>He walked on and on; as well do this as go back and loiter fretfully at
the hotel. He got as far as the Capo d' Orso, the headland half-way
between Amalfi and Salerno, and there sat down by the wayside to rest.
From this point Salerno was first visible, in the far distance, between
the sea and the purple Apennines.</p>
<p>Either Elgar was not coming, or he had lingered long between the two
portions of his journey.</p>
<p>Mallard turned back; if the carriage came, it would overtake him. He
plodded slowly, the evening falling around him in still loveliness,
fragrance from the groves of orange and lemon spread on every motion of
the air.</p>
<p>And if he did not come? That must have some strange meaning. In any
case, he must surely write. And ten to one his letter would be a lie.
What was to be expected of him but a lie?</p>
<p>Monday, Tuesday, and now Wednesday morning. Hitherto not even a letter.</p>
<p>When it was clear that Elgar had disregarded his promise, and, for
whatever reason, did not even seek to justify or excuse himself, there
came upon Mallard a strong mood of scorn, which for some hours enabled
him to act as though all his anxiety were at an end. He set himself a
piece of work; a flash of the familiar energy traversed his mind. He
believed that at length his degradation was over, and that, come what
might, he could now face it sturdily. Mere self-deception, of course.
The sun veiled itself, and hope was as far as ever.</p>
<p>Never before had he utterly lost the power of working. In every
struggle he had speedily overcome, and found in work the one unfailing
resource. If he were robbed of this, what stay had life for him
henceforth? He could not try to persuade himself that his suffering
would pass, sooner or later, and time grant him convalescence; the
blackness ahead was too profound. He fell again into torpor, and let
the days go as they would; he cared not.</p>
<p>But this morning brought him a letter. At the first glance he was
surprised by a handwriting which was not Elgar's; recollecting himself,
he knew it for that of Mrs. Lessingham.</p>
<br/>
<p class="letter">
"DEAR MR. MALLARD,—</p>
<p class="letter">
"It grieves me to be obliged to send you disquieting news so soon after
your departure from Naples, but I think you will agree with me that I
have no choice but to write of something that has this morning come to
my knowledge. You have no taste for roundabout phrases, so I will say
at once in plain words that Cecily and Mr. Elgar have somehow contrived
to fall in love with each other—or to imagine that they have done so,
which, as regards results, unfortunately amounts to the same thing. I
cannot learn by what process it came about, but I am assured by Cecily,
in words of becoming vagueness, that they plighted troth, or some thing
of the kind, yesterday at Pompeii. There was a party of four: Mr. and
Mrs. Bradshaw, Cecily, and Mrs. Baske. At Pompeii they were
unexpectedly (so I am told) joined by Mr. Elgar—notwithstanding that
he had taken leave of us on Saturday, with the information that he was
about to return to you at Amalfi, and there devote himself to literary
work of some indefinite kind. Perhaps you have in the meantime heard
from him. This morning Cecily received a letter, in which he made
peremptory request for an interview; she showed this to me. My duty
was plain. I declared the interview impossible, and Cecily gave way on
condition that I saw Mr. Elgar, told him why she herself did not
appear, and forthwith wrote to you. Our young gentleman was
disconcerted when he found that his visit was to be wasted on my
uninteresting self. I sent him about his business—only that,
unhappily, he has none—bidding him wait till we had heard from you.</p>
<p class="letter">
"I fancy this will be as disagreeable to you as it is to me. The poor
child is in a sad state, much disposed, I fear, to regard me as her
ruthless enemy, and like to fall ill if she be kept long in idle
suspense. Do you think it worth while to come to Naples? It is very
annoying that your time should be wasted by foolish children. I had
given Cecily credit for more sense. For my own part, I cannot think
with patience of her marrying Mr. Elgar; or rather, I cannot think of
it without dread. We must save her from becoming wise through bitter
sorrow, if it can in any way be managed. I hope and trust that nothing
may happen to prevent your receiving this letter to-morrow, for I am
very uneasy, and not likely to become less so as time goes on.</p>
<p class="letter">
"Believe me, dear Mr. Mallard,</p>
<p class="letter">
"Sincerely yours,
<br/>
"EDITH LESSINGHAM."</p>
<br/>
<p>At seven o'clock in the evening, Mallard was in Naples. He did not go
to Casa Rolandi, but took a room in one of the musty hotels which
overlook the port. When he felt sure that Mrs. Gluck's guests must have
dined, he presented himself at the house and sent his name to Mrs.
Lessingham.</p>
<p>She took his hand with warm welcome.</p>
<p>"Thank you for coming so promptly. I have been getting into such a
state of nervousness. Cecily keeps her room, and looks ill; I have
several times been on the point of sending for the doctor, though it
seemed absurd."</p>
<p>Mallard seated himself without invitation; indeed, he had a difficulty
in standing.</p>
<p>"Hasn't she been out to-day?" he asked, in a voice which might have
signified selfish indifference.</p>
<p>"Nor yesterday. Mrs. Spence was here this morning, but Cecily would not
see her. I made excuses, and of course said nothing of what was going
on. I asked the child if she would like to see Mrs. Baske, but she
refused."</p>
<p>Mallard sat as if he had nothing to say, looking vaguely about the room.</p>
<p>"Have you heard from Mr. Elgar?" Mrs. Lessingham inquired.</p>
<p>"No. I know nothing about him. I haven't been to Casa Rolandi, lest I
should meet him. It was better to see you first."</p>
<p>"You were not prepared for this news?"</p>
<p>"His failure to return made me speculate, of course. I suppose they
have met several times at Mrs. Baske's?"</p>
<p>"That at once occurred to me, but Cecily assures me that is not so.
There is a mystery. I have no idea how they saw each other privately at
Pompeii on Monday. But, between ourselves, Mr. Mallard, I can't help
suspecting that he had learnt from his sister the particulars of the
excursion."</p>
<p>"You think it not impossible that Mrs. Baske connived at their meeting
in that way?"</p>
<p>"One doesn't like to use words of that kind, but—"</p>
<p>"I suppose one must use the word that expresses one's meaning," said
Mallard, bluntly. "But I didn't think Mrs. Baske was likely to aid her
brother for such a purpose. Have you any reason to think the contrary?"</p>
<p>"None that would carry any weight."</p>
<p>Mallard paused; then, with a restless movement on his chair exclaimed:</p>
<p>"But what has this to do with the matter? What has happened has
happened, and there's an end of it. The question is, what ought to be
done now? I don't see that we can treat Miss Doran like a child."</p>
<p>Mrs. Lessingham looked at him. She was resting one arm on a table by
which she sat, and supporting her forehead with her hand.</p>
<p>"You propose that things should take their natural course?"</p>
<p>"They will, whether I propose it or not."</p>
<p>"And if our next information is that they desire to be married as soon
as conveniently may be?"</p>
<p>"That is another matter. They will have no consent of mine to anything
of the kind."</p>
<p>"You relieve me."</p>
<p>Mallard looked at her frowningly.</p>
<p>"Miss Doran," he continued, "will not marry Elgar with my consent until
she be one-and-twenty. Then, of course, she may do as she likes."</p>
<p>"You will see Mr. Elgar, and make this clear to him?"</p>
<p>"Very clear indeed," was the grim reply. "As for any thing else, why,
what can we do? If they insist upon it, I suppose they must see each
other—of course, under reasonable restrictions. You cannot make
yourself a duenna of melodrama, Mrs. Lessingham."</p>
<p>"Scarcely. But I think our stay at Naples may reasonably be
shortened—unless, of course, Mr. Elgar leaves."</p>
<p>"You take it for granted, I see, that Miss Doran will be guided by our
judgment," said Mallard, after musing on the last remark.</p>
<p>"I have no fear of that," replied Mrs. Lessingham with confidence, "if
it is made to appear only a question of postponement. This will be a
trifle compared with my task of yesterday morning. You can scarcely
imagine how astonished she was at the first hint of opposition."</p>
<p>"I can imagine it very well," said the other, in his throat. "What else
could be expected after—" He checked himself on the point of saying
something that would have revealed his opinion of Mrs. Lessingham's
"system"—his opinion accentuated by unreasoning bitterness. "From all
we know of her," were the words he substituted.</p>
<p>"She is more like her father than I had supposed," said Mrs.
Lessingham, meditatively.</p>
<p>Mallard stood up.</p>
<p>"You will let her know that I have been here?"</p>
<p>"Certainly."</p>
<p>"She has expressed no wish to see me?"</p>
<p>"None. I had better report to her simply that you have no objection to
Mr. Elgar's visits."</p>
<p>"That is all I would say at present. I shall see Elgar tonight. He is
still at Casa Rolandi, I take it?"</p>
<p>"That was the address on his letter."</p>
<p>"Then, good-night. By-the-bye, I had better give you my address." He
wrote it on a leaf in his pocket-book. "I will see you again in a day
or two, when things have begun to clear up."</p>
<p>"It's too bad that you should have this trouble, Mr. Mallard."</p>
<p>"I don't pretend to like it, but there's no help."</p>
<p>And he left Mrs. Lessingham to make her comment on his candour.</p>
<p>Yes, Signor Elgar was in his chamber; he had entered but a quarter of
an hour since. The signor seemed not quite well, unhappily—said
Olimpia, the domestic, in her chopped Neapolitan. Mallard vouchsafed no
reply. He knocked sharply at the big solid door. There was a cry of
"Avanti!" and he entered.</p>
<p>Elgar advanced a few steps. He did not affect to smile, but looked
directly at his visitor, who—as if all the pain of the interview were
on him rather than the other—cast down his eyes.</p>
<p>"I was expecting you," said Reuben, without offering his hand.</p>
<p>"So was I you—three days ago."</p>
<p>"Sit down, and let us talk. I'm ashamed of myself, Mallard. I ought at
all events to have written."</p>
<p>"One would have thought so."</p>
<p>"Have you seen Mrs. Lessingham?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Then you understand everything. I repeat that I am ashamed of my
behaviour to you. For days—since last Saturday—I have been little
better than a madman. On Saturday I went to say good-bye to Mrs.
Lessingham and her niece; it was <i>bona fide</i>, Mallard."</p>
<p>"In your sense of the phrase. Go on."</p>
<p>"I tell you, I then meant to leave Naples," pursued Elgar, who had
repeated this so often to himself, by way of palliation, that he had
come to think it true. "It was not my fault that I couldn't when that
visit was over. It happened that I saw Miss Doran alone—sat talking
with her till her aunt returned."</p>
<p>Mrs. Lessingham had made no mention of this little matter. Hearing of
it, Mallard ejaculated mentally, "Idiot!"</p>
<p>"It was all over with me. I broke faith with you—as I should have done
with any man; as I should have done if the lives of a hundred people
had depended on my coming. I didn't write, because I preferred not to
write lies, and if I had told the truth, I knew you would come at once.
To be sure, silence might have had the same result, but I had to risk
something, and I risked that."</p>
<p>"I marvel at your disinclination to lie."</p>
<p>"What do you mean by saying that?" broke out Elgar, with natural warmth.</p>
<p>"I mean simply what I say. Go on."</p>
<p>"After all, Mallard, I don't quite know why you should take this tone
with me. If a man falls in love, he thinks of nothing but how to gain
his end; I should think even you can take that for granted. My broken
promise is a trifle in view of what caused it."</p>
<p>"Again, in <i>your</i> view. In mine it is by no means a trifle. It
distinguishes you from honourable men, that's all; a point of some
moment, I should think, when your character is expressly under
discussion."</p>
<p>"You mean, of course, that I am not worthy of Cecily. I can't grant any
such conclusion."</p>
<p>"Let us leave that aside for the present," said Mallard. "Will you tell
me how it came to pass that you met Miss Doran and her companions at
Pompeii?"</p>
<p>Elgar hesitated; whereupon the other added quickly:</p>
<p>"If it was with Miss Doran's anticipation, I want no details."</p>
<p>"No, it wasn't."</p>
<p>Their looks met.</p>
<p>"By chance, then, of course?" said Mallard, sourly.</p>
<p>Elgar spoke on an impulse, leaning forward.</p>
<p>"Look, I won't lie to you. Miriam told me they were going. I met her
that morning, when I was slinking about, and I compelled her to give me
her help—sorely against her will. Don't think ill of her for it,
Mallard. I frightened her by my violent manner. I haven't seen her
since; she can't know what the result has been. None of them at Pompeii
suspected—only a moment of privacy; there's no need to say any more
about it."</p>
<p>Mallard mused over this revelation. He felt inclined to scorn Elgar for
making it. It affected him curiously, and at once took a place among
his imaginings of Miriam.</p>
<p>"You shall promise me that you won't betray your knowledge of this,"
added Reuben. "At all events, not now. Promise me that. Your word is to
be trusted, I know."</p>
<p>"It's very unlikely that I should think of touching on the matter to
your sister. I shall make no promise."</p>
<p>"Have you seen Cecily herself?" Elgar asked, leaving the point aside in
his eagerness to come to what concerned him more deeply.</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"I have waited for your permission to visit her. Do you mean to refuse
it?"</p>
<p>"No. If you call to-morrow morning, you will be admitted. Mrs.
Lessingham is willing that you should see her niece in private."</p>
<p>"Hearty thanks for that, Mallard! We haven't shaken hands yet, you
remember. Forgive me for treating you so ill."</p>
<p>He held out his band cordially, and Mallard could not refuse it, though
he would rather have thrust his fingers among red coals than feel that
hot pressure.</p>
<p>"I believe I can be grateful," pursued Elgar, in a voice that quivered
with transport. "I will do my best to prove it."</p>
<p>"Let us speak of things more to the point. What result do you foresee
of this meeting to-morrow!"</p>
<p>The other hesitated.</p>
<p>"I shall ask Cecily when she will marry me."</p>
<p>"You may do so, of course, but the answer cannot depend upon herself
alone."</p>
<p>"What delay do you think necessary?"</p>
<p>"Until she is of age, and her own mistress," replied Mallard, with
quiet decision.</p>
<p>"Impossible! What need is there to wait all that time?"</p>
<p>"Why, there is this need, Elgar," returned the other, more vigorously
than he had yet spoken. "There is need that you should prove to those
who desire Miss Doran's welfare that you are something more than a
young fellow fresh from a life of waste and idleness and everything
that demonstrates or tends to untrustworthiness. It seems to me that a
couple of years or so is not an over-long time for this, all things
considered."</p>
<p>Elgar kept silent.</p>
<p>"You would have seen nothing objectionable in immediate marriage?" said
Mallard.</p>
<p>"It is useless to pretend that I should."</p>
<p>"Not even from the point of view of Mrs. Lessingham and myself?"</p>
<p>"You yourself have never spoken plainly about such things in my
hearing; but I find you in most things a man of your time. And it
doesn't seem to me that Mrs. Lessingham is exactly conventional in her
views."</p>
<p>"You imagine yourself worthy of such a wife at present?"</p>
<p>"Plainly, I do. It would be the merest hypocrisy if I said anything
else. If Cecily loves me, my love for her is at least as strong. If we
are equal in that, what else matters? I am not going to cry <i>Peccavi</i>
about the past. I have lived, and you know what that means in my
language. In what am I inferior as a man to Cecily as a woman? Would
you have me snivel, and talk about my impurity and her angelic
qualities? You know that you would despise me if I did—or any other
man who used the same empty old phrases."</p>
<p>"I grant you that," replied Mallard, deliberately. "I believe I am no
more superstitious with regard to these questions than you are, and I
want to hear no cant. Let us take it on more open ground. Were Cecily
Doran my daughter, I would resist her marrying you to the utmost of my
power—not simply because you have lived laxly, but because of my
conviction that the part of your life is to be a pattern of the whole.
I have no faith in you—no faith in your sense of honour, in your
stability, not even in your mercy. Your wife will be, sooner or later,
one of the unhappiest of women. Thinking of you in this way, and being
in the place of a parent to Cecily, am I doing my duty or not in
insisting that she shall not marry you hastily, that even in her own
despite she shall have time to study you and herself, that she shall
only take the irrevocable step when she clearly knows that it is done
on her own responsibility? You may urge what you like; I am not so
foolish as to suppose you capable of consideration for others in your
present state of mind. I, however, shall defend myself from the girl's
reproaches in after-years. There will be no marriage until she is
twenty-one."</p>
<p>A silence of some duration followed. Elgar sat with bent head, twisting
his moustaches. At length:</p>
<p>"I believe you are right, Mallard. Not in your judgment of me, but in
your practical resolve."</p>
<p>Mallard examined him from under his eyebrows.</p>
<p>"You are prepared to wait?" he asked, in an uncertain voice.</p>
<p>"Prepared, no. But I grant the force of your arguments. I will try to
bring myself to patience."</p>
<p>Mallard sat unmoving. His legs were crossed, and he held his soft felt
hat crushed together in both his hands. Elgar glanced at him once or
twice, expecting him to speak, but the other was mute.</p>
<p>"Your judgment of me," Elgar resumed, "is harsh and unfounded. I don't
know how you have formed it. You know nothing of what it means to me to
love such a girl as Cecily. Here I have found my rest. It supplies me
with no new qualities, but it strengthens those I have. You picture me
being unfaithful to Cecily—deserting her, becoming brutal to her?
There must be a strange prejudice in your mind to excite such images."
He examined Mallard's face. "Some day I will remind you of your
prophecies."</p>
<p>Mallard regarded him, and spoke at length, in a strangely jarring,
discordant voice.</p>
<p>"I said that hastily. I make no prophecies. I wished to say that those
seemed to me the probabilities."</p>
<p>"Thank you for the small mercy, at all events," said Elgar, with a
laugh.</p>
<p>"What do you intend to do?" Mallard proceeded to ask, changing his
position.</p>
<p>"I can make no plans yet. I have pretended to only too often. You have
no objection to my remaining here?"</p>
<p>"You must take your own course—with the understanding to which we have
come."</p>
<p>"I wish I could make you look more cheerful, Mallard. I owe it to you,
for you have given me more gladness than I can utter."</p>
<p>"You can do it."</p>
<p>"How?"</p>
<p>"See her to-morrow morning, and then go back to England, and make
yourself some kind of reputable existence."</p>
<p>"Not yet. That is asking too much. Not so soon."</p>
<p>"As you please. We understand each other on the main point."</p>
<p>"Yes. Are you going back to Amalfi?"</p>
<p>"I don't know."</p>
<p>They talked for a few minutes more, in short sentences of this kind,
but did not advance beyond the stage of mutual forbearance. Mallard
lingered, as though not sure that he had fulfilled his mission. In the
end he went away abruptly.</p>
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